The White Company, by Arthur Conan Doyle

Chapter 4

How the Bailiff of Southampton Slew the Two Masterless Men.

The road along which he travelled was scarce as populous as most other roads in the kingdom, and far
less so than those which lie between the larger towns. Yet from time to time Alleyne met other wayfarers, and more than
once was overtaken by strings of pack mules and horsemen journeying in the same direction as himself. Once a begging
friar came limping along in a brown habit, imploring in a most dolorous voice to give him a single groat to buy bread
wherewith to save himself from impending death. Alleyne passed him swiftly by, for he had learned from the monks to
have no love for the wandering friars, and, besides, there was a great half-gnawed mutton bone sticking out of his
pouch to prove him a liar. Swiftly as he went, however, he could not escape the curse of the four blessed evangelists
which the mendicant howled behind him. So dreadful are his execrations that the frightened lad thrust his fingers into
his ear-holes, and ran until the fellow was but a brown smirch upon the yellow road.

Further on, at the edge of the woodland, he came upon a chapman and his wife, who sat upon a fallen tree. He had put
his pack down as a table, and the two of them were devouring a great pasty, and washing it down with some drink from a
stone jar. The chapman broke a rough jest as he passed, and the woman called shrilly to Alleyne to come and join them,
on which the man, turning suddenly from mirth to wrath, began to belabor her with his cudgel. Alleyne hastened on, lest
he make more mischief, and his heart was heavy as lead within him. Look where he would, he seemed to see nothing but
injustice and violence and the hardness of man to man.

But even as he brooded sadly over it and pined for the sweet peace of the Abbey, he came on an open space dotted
with holly bushes, where was the strangest sight that he had yet chanced upon. Near to the pathway lay a long clump of
greenery, and from behind this there stuck straight up into the air four human legs clad in parti-colored hosen, yellow
and black. Strangest of all was when a brisk tune struck suddenly up and the four legs began to kick and twitter in
time to the music. Walking on tiptoe round the bushes, he stood in amazement to see two men bounding about on their
heads, while they played, the one a viol and the other a pipe, as merrily and as truly as though they were seated in a
choir. Alleyne crossed himself as he gazed at this unnatural sight, and could scarce hold his ground with a steady
face, when the two dancers, catching sight of him, came bouncing in his direction. A spear’s length from him, they each
threw a somersault into the air, and came down upon their feet with smirking faces and their hands over their
hearts.

“A guerdon—a guerdon, my knight of the staring eyes!” cried one.

“A gift, my prince!” shouted the other. “Any trifle will serve—a purse of gold, or even a jewelled goblet.”

Alleyne thought of what he had read of demoniac possession—the jumpings, the twitchings, the wild talk. It was in
his mind to repeat over the exorcism proper to such attacks; but the two burst out a-laughing at his scared face, and
turning on to their heads once more, clapped their heels in derision.

“Hast never seen tumblers before?” asked the elder, a black-browed, swarthy man, as brown and supple as a hazel
twig. “Why shrink from us, then, as though we were the spawn of the Evil One?”

“Truly, sirs, it is a new sight to me,” the clerk answered. “When I saw your four legs above the bush I could scarce
credit my own eyes. Why is it that you do this thing?”

“A dry question to answer,” cried the younger, coming back on to his feet. “A most husky question, my fair bird! But
how? A flask, a flask!—by all that is wonderful!” He shot out his hand as he spoke, and plucking Alleyne’s bottle out
of his scrip, he deftly knocked the neck off, and poured the half of it down his throat. The rest he handed to his
comrade, who drank the wine, and then, to the clerk’s increasing amazement, made a show of swallowing the bottle, with
such skill that Alleyne seemed to see it vanish down his throat. A moment later, however, he flung it over his head,
and caught it bottom downwards upon the calf of his left leg.

“We thank you for the wine, kind sir,” said he, “and for the ready courtesy wherewith you offered it. Touching your
question, we may tell you that we are strollers and jugglers, who, having performed with much applause at Winchester
fair, are now on our way to the great Michaelmas market at Ringwood. As our art is a very fine and delicate one,
however, we cannot let a day go by without exercising ourselves in it, to which end we choose some quiet and sheltered
spot where we may break our journey. Here you find us; and we cannot wonder that you, who are new to tumbling, should
be astounded, since many great barons, earls, marshals and knight, who have wandered as far as the Holy Land, are of
one mind in saying that they have never seen a more noble or gracious performance. If you will be pleased to sit upon
that stump, we will now continue our exercise.”

Alleyne sat down willingly as directed with two great bundles on either side of him which contained the strollers’
dresses—doublets of flame-colored silk and girdles of leather, spangled with brass and tin. The jugglers were on their
heads once more, bounding about with rigid necks, playing the while in perfect time and tune. It chanced that out of
one of the bundles there stuck the end of what the clerk saw to be a cittern, so drawing it forth, he tuned it up and
twanged a harmony to the merry lilt which the dancers played. On that they dropped their own instruments, and putting
their hands to the ground they hopped about faster and faster, ever shouting to him to play more briskly, until at last
for very weariness all three had to stop.

Both opened their eyes at this, and stared at Alleyne with as much amazement as he had shown at them.

“You have a fine trick of ear then,” said one. “We have long wished to meet such a man. Wilt join us and jog on to
Ringwood? Thy duties shall be light, and thou shalt have two-pence a day and meat for supper every night.”

“With as much beer as you can put away,” said the other “and a flask of Gascon wine on Sabbaths.”

“Nay, it may not be. I have other work to do. I have tarried with you over long,” quoth Alleyne, and resolutely set
forth upon his journey once more. They ran behind him some little way, offering him first fourpence and then sixpence a
day, but he only smiled and shook his head, until at last they fell away from him. Looking back, he saw that the
smaller had mounted on the younger’s shoulders, and that they stood so, some ten feet high, waving their adieus to him.
He waved back to them, and then hastened on, the lighter of heart for having fallen in with these strange men of
pleasure.

Alleyne had gone no great distance for all the many small passages that had befallen him. Yet to him, used as he was
to a life of such quiet that the failure of a brewing or the altering of an anthem had seemed to be of the deepest
import, the quick changing play of the lights and shadows of life was strangely startling and interesting. A gulf
seemed to divide this brisk uncertain existence from the old steady round of work and of prayer which he had left
behind him. The few hours that had passed since he saw the Abbey tower stretched out in his memory until they outgrew
whole months of the stagnant life of the cloister. As he walked and munched the soft bread from his scrip, it seemed
strange to him to feel that it was still warm from the ovens of Beaulieu.

When he passed Penerley, where were three cottages and a barn, he reached the edge of the tree country, and found
the great barren heath of Blackdown stretching in front of him, all pink with heather and bronzed with the fading
ferns. On the left the woods were still thick, but the road edged away from them and wound over the open. The sun lay
low in the west upon a purple cloud, whence it threw a mild, chastening light over the wild moorland and glittered on
the fringe of forest turning the withered leaves into flakes of dead gold, the brighter for the black depths behind
them. To the seeing eye decay is as fair as growth, and death as life. The thought stole into Alleyne’s heart as he
looked upon the autumnal country side and marvelled at its beauty. He had little time to dwell upon it however, for
there were still six good miles between him and the nearest inn. He sat down by the roadside to partake of his bread
and cheese, and then with a lighter scrip he hastened upon his way.

There appeared to be more wayfarers on the down than in the forest. First he passed two Dominicans in their long
black dresses, who swept by him with downcast looks and pattering lips, without so much as a glance at him. Then there
came a gray friar, or minorite, with a good paunch upon him, walking slowly and looking about him with the air of a man
who was at peace with himself and with all men. He stopped Alleyne to ask him whether it was not true that there was a
hostel somewhere in those parts which was especially famous for the stewing of eels. The clerk having made answer that
he had heard the eels of Sowley well spoken of, the friar sucked in his lips and hurried forward. Close at his heels
came three laborers walking abreast, with spade and mattock over their shoulders. They sang some rude chorus right
tunefully as they walked, but their English was so coarse and rough that to the ears of a cloister-bred man it sounded
like a foreign and barbarous tongue. One of them carried a young bittern which they had caught upon the moor, and they
offered it to Alleyne for a silver groat. Very glad he was to get safely past them, for, with their bristling red
beards and their fierce blue eyes, they were uneasy men to bargain with upon a lonely moor.

Yet it is not always the burliest and the wildest who are the most to be dreaded. The workers looked hungrily at
him, and then jogged onwards upon their way in slow, lumbering Saxon style. A worse man to deal with was a
wooden-legged cripple who came hobbling down the path, so weak and so old to all appearance that a child need not stand
in fear of him. Yet when Alleyne had passed him, of a sudden, out of pure devilment, he screamed out a curse at him,
and sent a jagged flint stone hurtling past his ear. So horrid was the causeless rage of the crooked creature, that the
clerk came over a cold thrill, and took to his heels until he was out of shot from stone or word. It seemed to him that
in this country of England there was no protection for a man save that which lay in the strength of his own arm and the
speed of his own foot. In the cloisters he had heard vague talk of the law—the mighty law which was higher than prelate
or baron, yet no sign could he see of it. What was the benefit of a law written fair upon parchment, he wondered, if
there were no officers to enforce it. As it fell out, however, he had that very evening, ere the sun had set, a chance
of seeing how stern was the grip of the English law when it did happen to seize the offender.

A mile or so out upon the moor the road takes a very sudden dip into a hollow, with a peat-colored stream running
swiftly down the centre of it. To the right of this stood, and stands to this day, an ancient barrow, or burying mound,
covered deeply in a bristle of heather and bracken. Alleyne was plodding down the slope upon one side, when he saw an
old dame coming towards him upon the other, limping with weariness and leaning heavily upon a stick. When she reached
the edge of the stream she stood helpless, looking to right and to left for some ford. Where the path ran down a great
stone had been fixed in the centre of the brook, but it was too far from the bank for her aged and uncertain feet.
Twice she thrust forward at it, and twice she drew back, until at last, giving up in despair, she sat herself down by
the brink and wrung her hands wearily. There she still sat when Alleyne reached the crossing.

“Come, mother,” quoth he, “it is not so very perilous a passage.”

“Alas! good youth,” she answered, “I have a humor in the eyes, and though I can see that there is a stone there I
can by no means be sure as to where it lies.”

“That is easily amended,” said he cheerily, and picking her lightly up, for she was much worn with time, he passed
across with her. He could not but observe, however, that as he placed her down her knees seemed to fail her, and she
could scarcely prop herself up with her staff.

“You are weak, mother,” said he. “Hast journeyed far, I wot.”

“From Wiltshire, friend,” said she, in a quavering voice; “three days have I been on the road. I go to my son, who
is one of the King’s regarders at Brockenhurst. He has ever said that he would care for me in mine old age.”

“And rightly too, mother, since you cared for him in his youth. But when have you broken fast?”

“At Lyndenhurst; but alas! my money is at an end, and I could but get a dish of bran-porridge from the nunnery. Yet
I trust that I may be able to reach Brockenhurst to-night, where I may have all that heart can desire; for oh! sir, but
my son is a fine man, with a kindly heart of his own, and it is as good as food to me to think that he should have a
doublet of Lincoln green to his back and be the King’s own paid man.”

“It is a long road yet to Brockenhurst,” said Alleyne; “but here is such bread and cheese as I have left, and here,
too, is a penny which may help you to supper. May God be with you!”

“May God be with you, young man!” she cried. “May He make your heart as glad as you have made mine!” She turned
away, still mumbling blessings, and Alleyne saw her short figure and her long shadow stumbling slowly up the slope.

He was moving away himself, when his eyes lit upon a strange sight, and one which sent a tingling through his skin.
Out of the tangled scrub on the old overgrown barrow two human faces were looking out at him; the sinking sun glimmered
full upon them, showing up every line and feature. The one was an oldish man with a thin beard, a crooked nose, and a
broad red smudge from a birth-mark over his temple; the other was a negro, a thing rarely met in England at that day,
and rarer still in the quiet southland parts. Alleyne had read of such folk, but had never seen one before, and could
scarce take his eyes from the fellow’s broad pouting lip and shining teeth. Even as he gazed, however, the two came
writhing out from among the heather, and came down towards him with such a guilty, slinking carriage, that the clerk
felt that there was no good in them, and hastened onwards upon his way.

He had not gained the crown of the slope, when he heard a sudden scuffle behind him and a feeble voice bleating for
help. Looking round, there was the old dame down upon the roadway, with her red whimple flying on the breeze, while the
two rogues, black and white, stooped over her, wresting away from her the penny and such other poor trifles as were
worth the taking. At the sight of her thin limbs struggling in weak resistance, such a glow of fierce anger passed over
Alleyne as set his head in a whirl. Dropping his scrip, he bounded over the stream once more, and made for the two
villains, with his staff whirled over his shoulder and his gray eyes blazing with fury.

The robbers, however, were not disposed to leave their victim until they had worked their wicked will upon her. The
black man, with the woman’s crimson scarf tied round his swarthy head, stood forward in the centre of the path, with a
long dull-colored knife in his hand, while the other, waving a ragged cudgel, cursed at Alleyne and dared him to come
on. His blood was fairly aflame, however, and he needed no such challenge. Dashing at the black man, he smote at him
with such good will that the other let his knife tinkle into the roadway, and hopped howling to a safer distance. The
second rogue, however, made of sterner stuff, rushed in upon the clerk, and clipped him round the waist with a grip
like a bear, shouting the while to his comrade to come round and stab him in the back. At this the negro took heart of
grace, and picking up his dagger again he came stealing with prowling step and murderous eye, while the two swayed
backwards and forwards, staggering this way and that. In the very midst of the scuffle, however, whilst Alleyne braced
himself to feel the cold blade between his shoulders, there came a sudden scurry of hoofs, and the black man yelled
with terror and ran for his life through the heather. The man with the birth-mark, too, struggled to break away, and
Alleyne heard his teeth chatter and felt his limbs grow limp to his hand. At this sign of coming aid the clerk held on
the tighter, and at last was able to pin his man down and glanced behind him to see where all the noise was coming
from.

Down the slanting road there was riding a big, burly man, clad in a tunic of purple velvet and driving a great black
horse as hard as it could gallop. He leaned well over its neck as he rode, and made a heaving with his shoulders at
every bound as though he were lifting the steed instead of it carrying him. In the rapid glance Alleyne saw that he had
white doeskin gloves, a curling white feather in his flat velvet cap, and a broad gold, embroidered baldric across his
bosom. Behind him rode six others, two and two, clad in sober brown jerkins, with the long yellow staves of their bows
thrusting out from behind their right shoulders. Down the hill they thundered, over the brook and up to the scene of
the contest.

“Here is one!” said the leader, springing down from his reeking horse, and seizing the white rogue by the edge of
his jerkin. “This is one of them. I know him by that devil’s touch upon his brow. Where are your cords, Peterkin? So!
Bind him hand and foot. His last hour has come. And you, young man, who may you be?”

“I am a clerk, sir, travelling from Beaulieu.”

“A clerk!” cried the other. “Art from Oxenford or from Cambridge? Hast thou a letter from the chancellor of thy
college giving thee a permit to beg? Let me see thy letter.” He had a stern, square face, with bushy side whiskers and
a very questioning eye.

“I am from Beaulieu Abbey, and I have no need to beg,” said Alleyne, who was all of a tremble now that the ruffle
was over.

“The better for thee,” the other answered. “Dost know who I am?”

“No, sir, I do not.”

“I am the law!”—nodding his head solemnly. “I am the law of England and the mouthpiece of his most gracious and
royal majesty, Edward the Third.”

Alleyne louted low to the King’s representative. “Truly you came in good time, honored sir,” said he. “A moment
later and they would have slain me.”

“But there should be another one,” cried the man in the purple coat. “There should be a black man. A shipman with
St. Anthony’s fire, and a black man who had served him as cook—those are the pair that we are in chase of.”

“The black man fled over to that side,” said Alleyne, pointing towards the barrow.

“He could not have gone far, sir bailiff,” cried one of the archers, unslinging his bow. “He is in hiding somewhere,
for he knew well, black paynim as he is, that our horses’ four legs could outstrip his two.”

“Then we shall have him,” said the other. “It shall never be said, whilst I am bailiff of Southampton, that any
waster, riever, draw-latch or murtherer came scathless away from me and my posse. Leave that rogue lying. Now stretch
out in line, my merry ones, with arrow on string, and I shall show you such sport as only the King can give. You on the
left, Howett, and Thomas of Redbridge upon the right. So! Beat high and low among the heather, and a pot of wine to the
lucky marksman.”

As it chanced, however, the searchers had not far to seek. The negro had burrowed down into his hiding-place upon
the barrow, where he might have lain snug enough, had it not been for the red gear upon his head. As he raised himself
to look over the bracken at his enemies, the staring color caught the eye of the bailiff, who broke into a long
screeching whoop and spurred forward sword in hand. Seeing himself discovered, the man rushed out from his
hiding-place, and bounded at the top of his speed down the line of archers, keeping a good hundred paces to the front
of them. The two who were on either side of Alleyne bent their bows as calmly as though they were shooting at the
popinjay at the village fair.

“Five,” replied the other, letting loose his string. Alleyne gave a gulp in his throat, for the yellow streak seemed
to pass through the man; but he still ran forward.

“Seven, you jack-fool,” growled the first speaker, and his bow twanged like a harp-string. The black man sprang high
up into the air, and shot out both his arms and his legs, coming down all a-sprawl among the heather. “Right under the
blade bone!” quoth the archer, sauntering forward for his arrow.

“The old hound is the best when all is said,” quoth the bailiff of Southampton, as they made back for the roadway.
“That means a quart of the best malmsey in Southampton this very night, Matthew Atwood. Art sure that he is dead?”

“Dead as Pontius Pilate, worshipful sir.”

“It is well. Now, as to the other knave. There are trees and to spare over yonder, but we have scarce leisure to
make for them. Draw thy sword, Thomas of Redbridge, and hew me his head from his shoulders.”

“A boon, gracious sir, a boon!” cried the condemned man.

“What then?” asked the bailiff.

“I will confess to my crime. It was indeed I and the black cook, both from the ship ‘La Rose de Gloire,’ of
Southampton, who did set upon the Flanders merchant and rob him of his spicery and his mercery, for which, as we well
know, you hold a warrant against us.”

“There is little merit in this confession,” quoth the bailiff sternly. “Thou hast done evil within my bailiwick, and
must die.”

“But, sir,” urged Alleyne, who was white to the lips at these bloody doings, “he hath not yet come to trial.”

“Young clerk,” said the bailiff, “you speak of that of which you know nothing. It is true that he hath not come to
trial, but the trial hath come to him. He hath fled the law and is beyond its pale. Touch not that which is no concern
of thine. But what is this boon, rogue, which you would crave?”

“I have in my shoe, most worshipful sir, a strip of wood which belonged once to the bark wherein the blessed Paul
was dashed up against the island of Melita. I bought it for two rose nobles from a shipman who came from the Levant.
The boon I crave is that you will place it in my hands and let me die still grasping it. In this manner, not only shall
my own eternal salvation be secured, but thine also, for I shall never cease to intercede for thee.”

At the command of the bailiff they plucked off the fellow’s shoe, and there sure enough at the side of the instep,
wrapped in a piece of fine sendall, lay a long, dark splinter of wood. The archers doffed caps at the sight of it, and
the bailiff crossed himself devoutly as he handed it to the robber.

“If it should chance,” he said, “that through the surpassing merits of the blessed Paul your sin-stained soul should
gain a way into paradise, I trust that you will not forget that intercession which you have promised. Bear in mind too,
that it is Herward the bailiff for whom you pray, and not Herward the sheriff, who is my uncle’s son. Now, Thomas, I
pray you dispatch, for we have a long ride before us and sun has already set.”

Alleyne gazed upon the scene—the portly velvet-clad official, the knot of hard-faced archers with their hands to the
bridles of their horses, the thief with his arms trussed back and his doublet turned down upon his shoulders. By the
side of the track the old dame was standing, fastening her red whimple once more round her head. Even as he looked one
of the archers drew his sword with a sharp whirr of steel and stept up to the lost man. The clerk hurried away in
horror; but, ere he had gone many paces, he heard a sudden, sullen thump, with a choking, whistling sound at the end of
it. A minute later the bailiff and four of his men rode past him on their journey back to Southampton, the other two
having been chosen as grave-diggers. As they passed Alleyne saw that one of the men was wiping his sword-blade upon the
mane of his horse. A deadly sickness came over him at the sight, and sitting down by the wayside he burst out weeping,
with his nerves all in a jangle. It was a terrible world thought he, and it was hard to know which were the most to be
dreaded, the knaves or the men of the law.